The Guardian (USA)

Amazon to stop accepting UK-issued Visa credit cards

- Hilary Osborne

Amazon has told customers that it plans to stop accepting payments made with UK-issued Visa credit cards in January.

In an email to users of the site, it blamed the cost of processing the payments, telling them: “Starting 19 January 2022, we will unfortunat­ely no longer accept Visa credit cards issued in the UK, due to the high fees Visa charges for processing credit card transactio­ns.”

The retailer said it would continue to accept Visa debit cards and other credit cards, including Mastercard, which supplies the retailer’s branded credit card, and American Express but acknowledg­ed that the change would be “inconvenie­nt” for some customers.

Payments on cards attract a range of fees including interchang­e fees and other transactio­n charges, and it is understood that Amazon’s move has not been prompted by an increase in any of the charges in particular.

In a statement, a spokespers­on for the retailer said: “The cost of accepting card payments continues to be an obstacle for businesses striving to provide the best prices for customers. These costs should be going down over time, with technologi­cal advancemen­ts, but, instead, they continue to stay high or even rise.

“As a result of Visa’s continued high cost of payments, we regret that

Amazon.co.uk will no longer accept UKissued Visa credit cards as of 19 January 2022.”

Interchang­e fees are typically a percentage of the cost of the transactio­n and are higher for credit card transactio­ns, and for those where purchases are made remotely, including online sales, although there are caps on payments made within the UK.

In a statement, Visa said it was “very disappoint­ed that Amazon is threatenin­g to restrict consumer choice in the future”.

It said: “When consumer choice is limited, nobody wins. We have a longstandi­ng relationsh­ip with Amazon, and we continue to work toward a resolution, so our cardholder­s can use their preferred Visa credit cards at Amazon UK without Amazon-imposed restrictio­ns come January 2022.”

It added that UK shoppers could continue to use their cards at Amazon “throughout the holiday season”.

Many shoppers choose to use credit cards for large purchases online because of the extra protection­s that are offered if things go wrong.

Under section 75 of the Consumer Credit Act, if a retailer goes out of business or fails to deliver goods as promised and the items cost more than £100, the credit card provider has an obligation to refund the costs.

James Andrews, from the comparison website money.co.uk, said the decision would come as a blow to the millions of UK shoppers who had Visa credit cards, including customers of Barclaycar­d and HSBC.

“With American Express also rejected by many UK retailers, that means people looking for rewards on their spending or trying to split the cost of shopping with a 0% purchase card on Amazon will be effectivel­y forced to choose a Mastercard,” he said.

“Hopefully, Visa and Amazon work out their difference­s before the ban comes into force on 19 January but in the meantime it would be wise to check your cards now.”

Card fees have long been an issue of contention between providers and retailers, and this month Visa and Mastercard increased their quoted fees for “card-not-present” payments on credit cards to merchants in the EU after the removal of caps post-Brexit.

The British Retail Consortium said companies faced an estimated £150m increase in the cost of accepting crossborde­r card payments, with British retailers shoulderin­g an extra £36.5m in fees, equivalent to £100,000 every day.

The Federation of Small Businesses said its members had experience­d soaring fees in recent years.

Its national chairman, Mike Cherry, said: “Small businesses are almost always charged more for card terminals than big corporates – so when online giants start throwing down the gauntlet, you know the situation is becoming critical.”

Visa’s shares were down 3.3% in premarket trading in the US.

 ?? Photograph: Roberto Machado Noa/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Amazon says it will continue to accept Visa debit cards and other credit cards.
Photograph: Roberto Machado Noa/Rex/Shuttersto­ck Amazon says it will continue to accept Visa debit cards and other credit cards.

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